Drink Me A Story blends tales (today about sunrise), fiction, and real-world exploration. Here’s the rundown:
Epic Rippers: Stories that f*&k. Raw, adventure travel stories. These non-fiction audio journals offer life lessons and stirring thoughts.
Sips and Shorts: Stories and interviews about drinks from around the world that have shaped culture and society.
The Library: Dive into “The Coin Chronicles,” an exclusive fantasy audiobook series. Each episode reveals a chapter of this epic saga of Gods, humans, and the coin that rules them.
Episode 76 Notes: A Global Odyssey Through Light & Life
Today we’re talking about sin and success, how the punishments we endure ultimately lead to the successes we find in life. We all make mistakes but it’s how we handle these screw ups that determines the course of our lives. In our story today, Juan knows this better than anyone else.
Summary of Podcast:
*Note – This is a summary of the full episode and containers spoilers. You can always listen to the podcast above.
The Lost Art of Watching Sunrises
In our fast-paced world, who pauses to watch a sunrise anymore? The moment the sun cranks itself into the sky, painting the world with light, or slips behind the horizon in a prism of color, is often ignored. Yet, sunrises hold a timeless beauty, each one unique, offering lessons in resilience, wonder, and perspective. From Israel to Colorado, I’ve witnessed sunrises and sunsets across the globe, each revealing something new about life and ourselves.
Sunrise in Israel: Embracing the Unexpected
Hiking Mt. Sinai in Nazareth, I crossed a highway that now splits the ancient mountain. Weaving a drunken path upward in wide half-circles, the sunrise broke the brittle chill of night, warming patches of wild green grass and clay earth. At the summit, a partly cloudy sky obscured the view we’d toiled for. Was the climb wasted? No. The sunrise taught me that the journey—moving, striving, living—is the true reward, not the view at the top. Golden rays pierced the clouds, reminding us to be grateful for the strength to climb and the chance to witness a divine moment beyond our control.
Sunset in Greece: Nostalgia and the Fleeting Beauty of the Sun
On Paros, Greece, a fisherman leaned against a metal railing, his body forming a triangle with the pier as he gazed at the sunset. The sky wept from the heat, and Helios, the mythical sun god, rode his golden chariot across the horizon. The fisherman didn’t fish—he basked in the fleeting beauty, letting it fill his heart before letting it go. This is nostos and algia—nostalgia—a bittersweet longing for something ephemeral, like a sunset. It’s an ache for a lost home, a greatness we once knew, felt deeply in the chest as the sun slips away.
Morocco’s Sunrise: The Sun as Life’s Guide
In Tangier, Morocco, blackout grates blocked the sunrise, leaving me disoriented in darkness. Without the sun, time felt elusive. For the Berber people, the sun, named Ashaman, is the god of fire, fertility, and life itself. They mark its cycles to nurture crops and survive the desert, calling it a “traveling” force. The sunrise is both essential and fleeting, a reminder of life’s unearned grace. Even when we resist rising, the sun greets us, shining through our reluctance, a gift we can never repay.
France’s Sunrise: Balancing Joy and World Pain
At Pointe du Hoc, France, the sunrise broke through cold air, illuminating barbed wire and crumbling Nazi bunkers. This same blood-red sky once ushered in the D-Day invasion, a day of destruction. The German term Weltschmerz—world pain—captures this duality: a sunrise can herald joy or tragedy. We can’t ignore the sorrow, but we can choose to wield the sun’s light for good, creating beauty amidst pain, hoping for days when scarred souls wake to coffee and gardens under the sunrise’s warmth.
Colorado’s Sun Dog: A New Perspective on Sunrises
In Colorado, a winter sunrise revealed a rare sun dog—a 22-degree halo with twin light spots caused by ice crystals refracting sunlight. Riding a ski lift through snow-laden trees, I wondered: had the sun changed, or had I? The concept of Anthropic Refraction explains this: just as light shifts through a prism, the world refracts through our evolving consciousness, revealing new meanings. Each sunrise, seen through fresh eyes, becomes a new experience, never growing old as long as we keep growing.
Why Sunrises Matter: A Call to Pause and Reflect
Sunrises remind us to pause, to see the world anew. They are constant yet ever-changing, shaped by location, weather, and our own perspectives. Whether it’s the golden rays of Mt. Sinai, the nostalgic ache of a Greek sunset, or the life-giving force in Morocco, the sunrise invites us to evolve, to find childlike wonder in the familiar. By embracing each sunrise, we embrace life’s impermanence and our capacity for growth.
As the sun blazes overhead and warm breeze whispers through the trees, nothing beats a chilled glass of Strawberry Sangria. This vibrant, fruit-packed drink embodies the carefree spirit of summer. We’re talking lazy afternoons with friends, picnics by the beach, or romantic evenings under twinkling stars. Bursting with ripe strawberries, citrusy notes, Strawberry Sangria is your ticket to sipping sunshine.
Ingredients for the Perfect Strawberry Sangria
The magic of Strawberry Sangria lies in its flexibility—you can tweak it to your taste—but a classic recipe starts with quality ingredients. Here’s what you’ll need to create a pitcher that serves 6–8:
1 bottle of Sauvignon Blanc or Pinot Grigio
½ cup of brandy
¼ cup of triple sec
¼ cup of simple syrup (adjust for sweetness—dissolve 1:1 sugar and water)
1 cup of sliced fresh strawberries
1 orange
1 lemon
1 lime
Optional: 2 cups of sparkling water or lemon-lime soda (for a refreshing fizz)
Optional: A sprig of mint or basil for a trendy 2025 twist
Pro Tip: Want to add a global flair? Swap brandy for a splash of soju, Korea’s famous spirit, for a Hallyu-inspired Strawberry Sangria that’s lighter (soju’s 16–24% ABV vs. brandy’s 40%) and smoother.
Want to really up your next party? Boozn Sam’s wine cocktail kits are easy to use and inspired by global recipes.
How to Make Strawberry Sangria: Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these simple steps to craft a Strawberry Sangria that’s as beautiful as it is delicious. Each step builds layers of flavor, ensuring every sip is a burst of summer joy.
Prep – Rinse and slice strawberries, orange, lemon, and lime, into thin, even rounds.
Mix – In a large glass pitcher, pour the bottle of dry white wine, ½ cup brandy (or soju), ¼ cup triple sec, and ¼ cup simple syrup. Stir with a wooden spoon to blend the flavors. Taste and adjust the simple syrup—some like their Strawberry Sangria sweeter, others prefer a tart edge.
Infuse – Add the sliced fruit to the pitcher. Gently muddle with a wooden spoon. Just enough to release their juices without turning them to mush.
Chill – Cover the pitcher with a lid or plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 2 hours. Overnight is best. The longer it sits, the more the strawberries’ ruby essence deepens the drink’s hue and taste.
Optional – Add Fizz – Right before serving, pour in 2 cups of sparkling water or lemon-lime soda for a bubbly lift. Stir gently to mix the fizz.
Optional – Garnish – Fill tall glasses with ice cubes, then ladle the Strawberry Sangria over the ice, ensuring each glass gets a generous scoop of fruit. Garnish with a fresh strawberry slice on the rim or a sprig of mint for a pop of color.
Enjoy – Sip slowly, letting the strawberries’ sweetness and citrusy zing transport you to a sunny paradise.
Final Notes:
Why Strawberry Sangria is Your Summer Go-To
Strawberry Sangria isn’t just a drink—it’s a vibe. Its rosy hue, studded with floating strawberries and citrus, captures summer’s essence in every glass. Whether you’re hosting a backyard barbecue, lounging at a beach picnic, or toasting a sunset date night, this refreshing cocktail elevates any moment. Plus, its versatility lets you customize it to your crowd—make it boozier with extra brandy, lighter with soju, or alcohol-free with white grape juice for the mindful drinking crowd.
In 2025, sangria’s popularity is soaring alongside global flavors like soju (1.34M case exports), as drinkers crave refreshing, fruit-forward cocktails. Strawberry Sangria fits right in, offering a balance of sweetness and fizz that’s perfect for warm days. Want to explore more summer drinks? Check out our Peach White Sangria Recipe for another fruity twist!
Want to really up your next party? Boozn Sam's wine cocktail kits are easy to use and inspired by global recipes.
This podcast blends tales (today about Pulque), fiction, and real-world exploration. Here’s the rundown:
Epic Rippers: Stories that f*&k. Raw, adventure travel stories. These non-fiction audio journals offer life lessons and stirring thoughts.
Sips and Shorts: Stories and interviews about drinks from around the world that have shaped culture and society.
The Library: Dive into “The Coin Chronicles,” an exclusive fantasy audiobook series. Each episode reveals a chapter of this epic saga of Gods, humans, and the coin that rules them.
Episode 49 Notes: Pulque
In a blood-drenched jungle, a priest’s faltering blade sends a bad omen into the world and seals his people’s fate. A mysterious virus ravages the land as silver-clad invaders crave gold and Maya, the goddess of Pulque. Pulque is one of the first types of Tequila. Maya’s intoxicating essence seduces priests and conquerors alike. But she has other plans beyond seduction. As empires crumble and fevers burn, Maya reveals herself – a love’s betrayal repaid in sores, death, and a divine reckoning. paired a drink (Kava root) with an anxiety inducing sport (bungee jumping.) Both would go on to become popular in the rest of the world. Kava root would ease the minds of the constantly anxious. Bungee Jumping would let daredevils get the rush they needed.
Transcript of Podcast:
*Note – This is the full episode and containers spoilers. You can always listen to the podcast above.
Pulque – The First Tequila
The first slice across his neck didn’t kill the boy. The child gagged and choked on his own blood, the blood turning pink and foamy where the deep gash was. His eyes widened in terror, and he didn’t understand the searing pain in his throat. He looked at the priest, choking, his eyes begging for help.
The priest looked down at the boy, seeing the fear. The knife swipe had opened the child’s throat. The high priest wanted to look away, repulsed by the loose skin vibrating with each shocked breath. The priest’s and the boy’s senses were dull. That was the only good thing. Hopefully, he didn’t feel much pain. The priest plunged his knife into the sacrifice’s heart. With a final twitch, the boy stopped moving. He prayed to the woman he loved, Maya, that the boy did not feel pain, despite his foolish mistake. He smelled her sweetness on the wind and hoped that everything would be okay.
Blood drained down the altar. It dripped into the trench, which wound around the pyramid and then into the heart of it. He rose and prayed. Those below chanted in response. It was a hot day, and the boy’s blood stuck to his hand and the hilt of the blade. He tried not to think about it.
The sacrifice was an omen. They were deciding what to do about the invaders. Should they befriend them or fight? Atl wanted to fight. He beat his chest. The rocks and shells around his neck rattled as he watched the sacrifice bleed out on the altar above him. The way the blood pooled would determine what they’d do. The gods would send a message.
The high priest stood and spoke to Atl and the rest of those gathered. They would befriend the new people who wore silver on their bodies. They would load up treasure chests with gold and greet their guests as friends.
The other priests stood at the altar off to the side, behind the high priest. They saw his mistake. The ambitious would use his flaw as leverage. He could almost see the end. The gods would punish him. They were ruthless. They were also loving.
But none loved the way Maya loved. He thought of Maya everywhere he went. She surrounded him. It was an unhealthy love for a priest. It was his secret. In the hot jungle, when the air clung thick and wet to his skin, he dreamed of being in Maya’s arms. So he went to her and lay with her. He told her his secrets and whispered his heart into her ear. She listened and held him, taking away worry and pain.
Maya did this for many men. She did this for Atl, even though he was in love with someone else. Maya did this for Pedro too. Maya greeted them with open arms and wrapped her lovers up in delicate hands and a sweet, mind buzzing embrace.
Maya took them all. Each one of them. From the high priests to the Spaniards. She spread her love because long ago love had betrayed her. Love shattered her into hundreds of tiny pieces. The bits of her could never go together again. They were scattered throughout the jungle. Part of her was near the temple. Part of her was in the gardens in the village. Part of her was in wild, remote regions that no one would ever explore. She was everywhere and nowhere at the same time.
She’d lost herself to love, which is why she gave it up so freely. It meant nothing to her anymore. Yet, love meant everything to them. So, she wielded it like a weapon.
Pedro lusted after her with such intensity that he couldn’t concentrate today. He could taste her on his lips, that sweet, mind numbing Maya. Their commander was talking about meeting the locals. He was distracted by the buzzing flies sticking to his sweating skin. It was irritating, and he yearned for Maya’s touch to help him forget. Pedro came a long way to be here. He left the place he was born, a little city on a hill. His house was sunbaked and small. He lived there with his parents and three siblings. Waking up brought freedom from that cramped space.
In the morning, he could look over the fortified walls and see the river far below. Mist rose from it. The stony landscape rolled for miles around him. Wool and leather traders pulled rickety wooden carts into the city. They brought news of the region. They spoke of wealthy cities where even the poor wore colorful, soft clothes. People did not herd their pigs through the muddy dirt streets, like they did here.
People lived in the shadows of cathedrals. Philosophers strolled the streets in front of the university, wearing open-toed leather sandals. They spoke of problems that only the wealthy could afford to think about. Such things as finding purpose in life. Making meaning. God and the role of some in society. In a city like that, it was easy to forget how the rest of the world lived, and that what was uncommon for them wasn’t the standard for all.
They extrapolated their lives as ideals for all to live by. They thought they were the apex predators of society. But having money doesn’t make your ideals better. Wealth made their hands and minds as soft as the dates they bought from Persian traders.
The Aztecs and Spaniards Meet
Well, today Pedro would get to know what it was like to be a trader. He was handpicked to meet an approaching convoy of locals. Pedro and the others walked up the beach from their boats. They left behind the tents they had pitched on the sand and met the locals at the edge of the jungle.
They were half naked and wore necklaces of rocks and shells. They spoke in a language Pedro did not understand. Mules pulled a large cart laden down with chests. Inside the chests was gold.
Alt didn’t like the arrivals. They had large, pointed things at their waists, and the silver they wore looked to be armor. The group gathered in front of them now did not wear helmets. They were here to say hello. When they brought out the gold, he saw the lust in their eyes. It was the same lust that appeared when they passed around Maya.
Alt didn’t like one of the arrivals in particular. He had an arrogant look about him, and he was always lusting after Maya. Alt shoved him in anger, and the man they called Pedro drew that piece of thin metal at his side and cut Alt’s arm.
It bled fast and clean and terrified Alt. These visitors had weapons made of things that they could not fight against. The boy Pedro was sent away for his actions. He looked over his shoulder at Alt when he left, rage burning in his eyes. They both wanted Maya. Only one could have her.
Maya reveled in the fight. She wanted them stupid and hurting each other for her sake. It brought her peace. It completed her. They had stood by when her mother mutilated her. They left the 400 bits of her where they lay, and it was her lover who gave her a second life. Had it not been for him, she never would have spread across the jungle floor. These people, the visitors and her people, would pay.
It was a week later before Alt had a fever, and by that point, he couldn’t remember who had gotten sick first. The fever turned into chills, despite the jungle heat. They brought such intense aches that he couldn’t get out of bed.
He went to the high priest, who looked on through dazed eyes, confused with what he saw. He threw prayers into the wind. Alt saw brown clay bottles in the priest’s pack and thought of Maya’s dark skin. It felt like only she could save him. He yearned for her.
The high priest was yearning too. Had he misread the omen? Would he need to make another sacrifice and see what the gods said? For the first time in a long time, the high priest didn’t know what to do. All he wanted was Maya. When times were bad she was there, his lips and her skin meeting. He needed that now more than ever.
After Alt’s fever came little red dots that swelled, filling with fluid. The pustules covered his body. They itched in an agonizing way. Others got the mysterious disease. By the time Alt’s pustules popped, his entire family had it. He vowed to survive, despite the discomfort. His love for Maya kept him going.
The city filled with the sick and dying, and Pedro didn’t want to get close. Smallpox had overwhelmed them. But they were laying siege to the city in search of more gold. All Pedro wanted during this time was Maya. It was the only thing that made life here tolerable. The city was a cesspool. People died faster than they could bury them. Their infected corpses clogged waterways and drainage systems. The visitors had brought an unknown enemy with them and benefited.
The high priest prayed for the sick and dying but it seemed to do know good. Whatever decimated them came from the gods as a curse. Had he loved Maya too much? Had he brought this on his people by failing to kill the boy with the first strike? It didn’t matter anymore. People were dying and the only one he could rely on through the horrid visions of puss popping pustules and throats seizing shut with infections, was Maya.
The Spaniards Conquer The Aztecs
Pedro finally marched into the city months later with the rest of the Spanish army. They lusted after gold. They dreamed of a life much different from the poor Spanish city on the hill they had come from. The killing was easy. Those the disease didn’t claim were demoralized. Pedro had permission to kill or enslave all. He enslaved many. He decided to kill the boy who had fought him at the first meeting. The one they called Alt. They let the priests live.
The high priest should have known that failing to kill the boy with his first strike was a bad omen. But his love for Maya clouded his judgment. When the Spaniards came in heavy silver armor, carrying sharp metal swords and slicing people apart with them, he thought of Maya. He prayed to Maya to spare him. The Spaniards spared him. Maya did not.
Maya, the unfortunate goddess who faced the wrath of her lover. She fell in love with someone her mother did not approve of. After pursuing the love in secret, her mother punished her by butchering her into 400 pieces. Distraught by her death, the lover spread her remains through the jungle so she could live again.
Maya did live again. She lived through a plant that the Aztecs lusted after. The maguey plant took 12 years to mature. When it reached that point, the Aztecs would cut it open and bleed the heart of 600 liters of sap.
Not only had humans failed to hide her when she chased after true love, but they stood by during her murder. Now they cut her heart open and bled her of her essence. But their mistake was thinking she gave the sap of her heart as a gift. They thought this liquid was gold. It fueled their priests. It built their cities and spread through all during ceremonies.
In reality, Maya gave the sap as a trap, and she had almost won.
The sap, once harvested, is fermented in vats for 7 to 14 days. It reaches an ABV of 2% to 7%. This mild intoxicant became an addiction for the Aztecs and strict rules cropped up to protect the drink and ensure an ample supply fell into the right hands. Hands like the high priest. Hands like their concubines and royalty. And hands like the hands of the Spaniards when given to them as a gift upon their arrival in this new, strange land.
What is Pulque?
The drink was called pulque and it tasted sweet on all the men’s lips. Many think the Spaniards came for gold, but there was another form of gold they sought. It was liquid gold. Pulque. And who is alive to say the addiction of Maya didn’t drive men to fight and kill for her?
After the decimation of Tenochtitlan, in search of this gold, they built bars, pulquerias throughout South America. After the conquest of his city, the high priest spent his days here, consuming Maya, consuming Pulque until it killed him. The Spanish saw that this liquid gold could make them lots of money. They saw the appeal. They saw how addicting it was.
But Maya was a cruel goddess. She wanted the Aztecs to pay. She wanted to wipe them from the planet for failing to defend the greatest thing in the world—love. In her mind, creatures incapable of protecting the best within humans didn’t deserve to live. Her gift of pulque was bound to that region only.
The sap ferments and spoils fast. It doesn’t last more than a few days. Transporting it to other parts of the world is impossible. It was a drink made by an angry goddess to enact revenge on people who gave up on love.
So, after her excruciating death at the hands of her mother, for giving in to the signs of her heart, Maya took her anger out on humans. She turned them against each other. She made them kill for her. She converted them into drunks, all while pretending to be a gift.
And isn’t that the way of things? Some of the worst curses come wrapped as beautiful gifts.
Pulquerias eventually fell out of favor. They were associated with drunkenness and criminality. The drink died with the Aztecs, replaced by a stronger, more shelf stable drink that didn’t ferment as fast.
Maya finally got her rest. Until today, anyway. Where those interested in the 2,000 year old drink make pulque in small batches. These are boutique operations. But, who knows, perhaps if the world turns far enough away from love once more, Maya will return.
Drink Me A Story blends tales (today about Champagne), fiction, and real-world exploration. Here’s the rundown:
Epic Rippers: Stories that f*&k. Raw, adventure travel stories. These non-fiction audio journals offer life lessons and stirring thoughts.
Sips and Shorts: Stories and interviews about drinks from around the world that have shaped culture and society.
The Library: Dive into “The Coin Chronicles,” an exclusive fantasy audiobook series. Each episode reveals a chapter of this epic saga of Gods, humans, and the coin that rules them.
Episode 55 Notes: Champagne
In 1910 Paris, the Palais Garnier hosts Le Vin Eternal, an opera honoring a divisive drink, Champagne. Masked composer Lucien Duval, scarred by betrayal, seeks revenge on the elite—like railway heir Raoul—who profit from fake apple champagne, ruining growers like Celeste Montague’s family. As Celeste shines onstage, Lucien’s red-masked “Phantom” drink spreads among the crowd. Chandeliers crash, fires erupt, and his rebellion, tied to the Champagne Riots, ignites. Celeste, caught between Raoul and Lucien, flees as the Garnier burns. Lucien escapes, leaving Raoul a menacing warning. Wine fuels a revolution, and Celeste must pick her next note.
Summary of Podcast:
*Note – This is a summary of the full episode and containers spoilers. You can always listen to the podcast above.
Introduction: A Gilded Stage, a Fiery Rebellion
In February 1910, Paris shimmered under a frosty glow, its Palais Garnier aglow with gaslight and decadence. The opera house, with its gilded columns and ornate chandeliers dripping like golden strands, hosted the premiere of Le Vin Eternal—a tribute to Champagne, France’s iconic drink that both defined and divided a nation. But beneath the opulence, a rebellion brewed, tied to the 1910 Champagne Riots, where vintners clashed with wine houses over “Phantom Champagne”—a cheap apple-based impostor passed off as the real thing. Enter Lucien Duval, a masked composer turned avenger, whose vengeance fermented into a plan that would either redeem France or burn it to the ground.
The Spark of Rebellion: Champagne’s Dark Secret
Lucien Duval watched from the shadows of the Palais Garnier, his face half-hidden by a white mask painted with curling grapevines—a gift from Celeste Montague, the opera’s star. The elites sipped Champagne from crystal glasses, unaware that Lucien’s drink, labeled with a red mask, was a snub to their greed. Ninety miles east in Ay, vineyards burned as growers rioted against wine houses peddling inferior “Phantom Champagne.” These impostors, made from apples, not grapes, drove prices down, bankrupting honest vintners like Lucien’s family.
A year prior, Lucien uncovered the betrayal: his brother sold apples to railway baron Raoul’s family, who flooded the market with fake Champagne. When Lucien confronted him, his brother attacked, leaving Lucien’s face scarred in a fiery blaze that consumed their vineyard. Now, in 1910, Lucien vowed vengeance, using the Palais Garnier as his stage to expose the corruption tainting Champagne’s legacy.
Celeste Montague: A Star Caught in the Crossfire
Below the opera’s gilded ceiling, Celeste prepared for her debut as lead alto in Le Vin Eternal. In her dressing room, surrounded by makeup artists and swirling dress crews, she gasped at a bouquet of two dozen roses from Raoul, the dashing railway heir in a velvet box seat. But her heart sank with worry—her family’s vineyard in Ay hadn’t responded in a month. Were they caught in the riots? Had their home burned?
Celeste’s performance was a tribute to their struggle, a statement against wine houses squeezing vintners dry with fake Champagne. Yet, as she took the stage, her voice soaring like silk, she felt Lucien’s absence in the music pit. She didn’t know he was orchestrating a darker plan, one where her aria would become the backdrop for chaos.
The Phantom’s Plan: Champagne as a Weapon
Lucien, the “Phantom of Champagne,” had spent months smuggling barrels, copper stills, and beakers into the Palais Garnier’s labyrinthine cellars. His “Phantom Champagne,” a fermented apple brew, was a mockery of the elites’ greed, distributed in bottles stamped with a red mask. As Celeste’s final aria reached its crescendo, the audience sipped unknowingly, entranced by her voice.
Below, Lucien moved through the dark cellars, his mask catching torchlight. He sabotaged Raoul’s carriage, knocking out the driver, and rigged the opera house’s chandeliers. At the act’s close, the chandeliers crashed, shattering bottles of his apple brew. The sweet scent filled the air as fires erupted, sparked by open flames. Screams echoed through the Palais Garnier as the crowd stampeded, their opulence shattered by Lucien’s vengeance.
A Reckoning in the Frosty Night
Celeste, horrified, realized Lucien had used her performance as a weapon. Raoul pulled her from the chaos, his firm grip guiding her to his carriage. As they sped through Paris’ frostbitten streets, the Palais Garnier burned behind them, a blackened symbol of rebellion. But the carriage raced on, ignoring Raoul’s demands to stop. When it finally halted, Raoul found the driver’s seat empty—save for a bottle of “Phantom Champagne,” a knife driven through it, a grisly warning.
Lucien watched from afar, adjusting his mask. He’d return to Paris’ underbelly, his revolution just beginning. The 1910 Champagne Riots had found their phantom—a vintner turned avenger, using Champagne to expose corruption. Celeste, torn between Raoul’s world and Lucien’s fight, faced a choice: join the rebellion or flee its flames.
The Legacy of Champagne and the 1910 Riots
The 1910 Champagne Riots marked a turning point for Champagne’s legacy. Vintners’ fury over fake “Phantom Champagne” led to stricter laws, ensuring only grape-based drinks from the Champagne region earned the name. Today, Champagne remains a symbol of luxury, but its history whispers of rebellion. Want to explore more sparkling wine tales? Check out our History of Prosecco (link-to-internal-post) for another fizzy journey!
In 2025, as Champagne sales soar, Lucien’s story reminds us: even the finest drinks carry the weight of struggle.